Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 549South Africa
DYNAPAC SA (PTY) Ltd v Black Bond Surfacing (PTY) Ltd (59158/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 549 (9 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
9 August 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## DYNAPAC SA (PTY) Ltd v Black Bond Surfacing (PTY) Ltd (59158/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 549 (9 August 2022)
DYNAPAC SA (PTY) Ltd v Black Bond Surfacing (PTY) Ltd (59158/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 549 (9 August 2022)
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sino date 9 August 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
no.
59158/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
In
the matter between:
In
the matter between:
DYNAPAC
SA (PTY)
LTD
Applicant
and
BLACK
BOND SURFACING (PTY) LTD
Respondent
Coram:
Dlamini J
Date
of delivery:
9 August 2022
The
judgment hereunder is deemed to have been delivered electronically by
circulation to the parties’ representatives via
email and shall
be uploaded onto the caselines system.
JUDGMENT
DLAMINI
J
[1]
This is a
rei vindicatio
application for the return of certain
equipment, which was sold and delivered subject to ownership only
passing to the respondent
when final payment was made.
[2]
The applicant is a company duly registered in terms of the Company
Laws of the Republic,
selling heavy-duty equipment.
[3]
The respondent is a company duly registered in terms of the Company
Laws of the Republic,
a contractor in the construction industry, more
particularly in the building of roads.
[4]
The applicant testified that on 27August 2020, the respondent
purchased from applicant
a second hand, used paver and two new
equipment, a pneumatic roller and a drum roller.
[5]
On the same day, pursuant to the above the parties signed a Customer
Order Confirmation.
An invoice was then generated by the applicant
amounting to R 4 899.000 (four million eight hundred and ninety
nine rand).
[6]
The applicant avers that the respondent initially made payments in
accordance with
their agreement. However, the applicant says the
respondent failed to honour the payments of installments due on 5
October 2020,
4 November and 4 December 2020.
[7]
The applicant submits that on 8 December 2020, the respondent sought
indulgence from
the applicant and made an undertaking to remedy the
arrears. On this undertaking, the respondent only made three
payments. Those
arrears due by the respondent remain well in excess
of a million rand.
[8]
The applicant says that on 5 November 2021, applicant issued a Notice
in terms of
Section 345 of the Companies Act
[1]
to the respondent.
[9]
The applicant submit that it went further and granted the respondent
a further 5 (five)
working days to remedy its breach without success.
[10]
Finally, the applicant submit that the respondent refused to remedy
the breach and return applicant’s
equipment after the applicant
has cancelled the agreement on 1 December 2020, alternatively on 4
August 2021, due to the effluxion
of time when the agreement ran its
natural conclusion.
[11]
The respondent does not, in so many ways, dispute the facts alleged
by the applicant. However,
the respondent denies that it is in breach
of the agreement as the applicant failed to comply with the terms of
the agreement.
The respondent submit that there are material dispute
of facts in this case, as a result says the respondent that this
application
should be referred to trial for
viva voce
evidence.
[12]
Furthermore, the respondent resist this application based on the
principle of
exceptio
non-adimpleti
contractus
.
That the plaintiff has not performed in terms of the contract
therefor the respondent’s obligation to perform has not
arisen
[2]
.
[13]
The question to be answered in this case is whether there are
material disputes of facts and
the issue relating to the respondent
defense of the
exceptio
non-adempleti contractus
.
[14]
It is a trite principle of law that where there are material dispute
of facts, which cannot be
decided on the papers. The applicant cannot
be entitled to a final order. In proceeding for final relief, the
approach to determining
disputes of facts is authoritatively set out
by Corbett AJ in the Plascon Evans case
[3]
.
[15]
This principle has been stated as follows;
“
As
the high court was called on to decide the matter without the benefit
of oral evidence it has to accept the facts alleged by
the appellants
(as respondents below)
,
unless they were so
far-fetched are clearly untenable
that the Court is justified
in rejecting them merely on the papers”
.
[16]
The applicant submits that there are not materiel disputes of facts
present in the matter. That
the denial of the respondent of the
Standard Terms and Conditions are far-fetched and should be rejected.
The applicant avers that
the respondent admitted placing the order
for the equipment required by the respondent
[17]
Furthermore, that the respondent admitted providing the applicant
with Purchase Order, receiving
a Customer Order Confirmation
containing a clear provision that ownership of
the equipment will remain vested in the applicant, which also
does include the installment payment plan. That the Respondent
admitted
the inception of the agreement on 4 September 2020, that ran
up to 4 August 2021. Further, that the respondent admitted the terms
and conditions contained in the quotation on used equipment. As a
result contends the applicant, that the respondent therefore
admitted
knowledge of the limited warranty on the second-hand equipment.
[18]
The respondent denies it is in breach of the agreement as the
applicant has failed to comply
in terms of the agreement. That the
machinery especially the paver did not work. The respondent contends
that there are various
telephonic conversation with the applicant
relating to the issue of the paver not working. Further that the
applicant did not bring
to the court’s attention the fact that
the three machines cannot work independently of another, neither do
the applicant
deal with the technical issues raised
by the respondent.
[19]
Finally, the respondent submits that the matter should be referred to
trial, as
viva voce
evidence needs to be heard.
[20]
The respondent’s
assertion
of
the existence of material
dispute
of facts in this matter are spurious and very thin. The Court in the
Plascon Evans
[4]
sets out the
guiding principle as follows;-
“
In
certain cases the denial by the respondent of the fact alleged by the
applicant may not be such as to raise genuine or bona fide
dispute of
facts.”
[21]
In this case, the respondent has admitted that it enquired about the
machinery, that it received
a quotation and thereafter placed an
order for the machinery. It is evident from the pleadings that the
respondent admitted signing
the Purchase Order and more critically in
my view is the respondent’s admission receiving the Customer
Order Confirmation
duly signed by the respondent clearly indicating
that the ownership of the equipment will remain vested in the
Applicant.
[22]
The respondent does not anywhere dispute the fact and acknowledges
that the paver only carries
a limited warranty as a second hand
equipment.
[23]
Further, the Respondent does not deny that it failed to honour the
monthly repayments installments
due to the applicant. Instead, the
respondent, on or about 3 December 2020, requested an indulgence and
undertook to settle the
arear amounts due to the applicant which
undertaking the respondent failed to honour. There is no denial or
dispute by the respondent
that it received the Section 345 Notice
from the applicant.
[24]
Also, the respondent does not dispute the applicant’s
cancellation of the contract on 9
December 2020, alternatively, that
the agreement ran its ordinary cause and it expired by effluxion of
time in August 2021.
[25]
In the light on the above, the Respondent’s claim of the
existence of material dispute
of facts has no merits, it is
unsupported. In my view, the purported existence of material dispute
of facts by the respondent is
just a deliberate excuse to avoid its
obligation to return the applicant machinery. The Respondent plea of
the
excepetio non-adempleti contractus
is nonexistent and is no supported by evidence and it is thus
dismissed.
In all the above,
circumstances, the following order is made.
1.
The order marked “X” signed by
me on 31 May 2022 is made an order of Court.
DLAMINI
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Date
of hearing:
30 May 2022
Handed
down on:
09 August 2022
For
the Appellant:
Charlene Britz
Email:
charlenebritz@yahoo.com
For
the
Respondents
:
CLH Harms
Email:
info@grunlaw.co.za
[1]
Act
61 of 1973
[2]
Grand
Mines (PTY) LTD v Giddey NO
[1998] ZASCA 99
;
1999 (1) SA 960
(SCA)
[3]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd [1984] (3) SA 623 (A)
[4]
ibid
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